Description
Book SynopsisHow has the migrant crisis shaped Europe's borders?
Trade Review'A significant contribution to the study of migration that challenges many of our assumptions about where borders are, how they work, and ultimately who is allowed to move' -- Reece Jones, University of Hawaii, author of 'Violent Borders: Refugees and the Right to Move'
'This book offers a powerful take on the human consequences of bordering Europe. In shifting the reader's gaze from migrants themselves to the EU roll-out of unprecedented migration controls it builds a distressing picture of a perennial political 'migration emergency'... a text fit for our times, speaking back to the dangerous political common-sense in a forceful collective voice: an urgent read' -- Ruben Andersson, author of 'Illegality, Inc.: Clandestine Migration and the Business of Bordering Europe'
'A collective, interdisciplinary, thoughtful, timely rendering of the new paradigm now governing how we live borders' -- Alison Mountz, Balsillie School of International Affairs
Table of ContentsList of Figures
Acknowledgements
Series Preface
Preface
Glossary
Introduction
1. The Where and When of Migration
2. Refuge, Rules and Rights
3. Governing Mobility
4. The Camps
5. The Sea is on Fire
Notes
Index